NEAR Protocol fell nearly 17% on June 4, 2026, becoming one of the worst-performing tokens of the day. The selloff was triggered largely by news that Arthur Hayes, co-founder of BitMEX, had sold his entire NEAR and Hyperliquid positions.
NEAR Price
Hayes announced the move publicly, listing three reasons: rising energy costs tied to the Iran war, three large AI company IPOs expected before early Q3, and a view that President Donald Trump may turn against AI politically. He said a fuller explanation would come in an essay called “Reality Test,” due the following Tuesday.
On-chain tracker Lookonchain confirmed Hayes sold 247,334 HYPE tokens for roughly $18.02 million. The amount of NEAR he sold was not disclosed, but the public announcement was enough to shake confidence in the token.
NEAR futures volume climbed above $2.8 billion on the day of the drop, but open interest fell more than 21% to around $543 million. That combination — high volume with falling open interest — typically means traders are closing leveraged bets, not opening new ones.
This kind of activity points to a broad risk-off shift in the market, not just selling tied to Hayes.
On the price chart, NEAR had already been struggling. The token rejected near the $3.00–$3.10 resistance zone before pulling back. It then fell through short-term moving averages, putting bulls on the defensive.
At the time of writing, NEAR was trading around $2.05, down roughly 12.8%. The $2.00–$2.01 zone is now the line in the sand for short-term traders.
Source: TradingView
If that level holds, a move back toward $2.20–$2.30 is possible. A full recovery would require a return to $2.55.
If $2.00 breaks, the next support sits near $1.73, followed by a wider accumulation range between $1.45 and $1.65.
NEAR is currently trading below its short-term momentum averages, with $2.00 acting as the key short-term support level.
The post NEAR Protocol (NEAR) Price: The Arthur Hayes Effect — How One Sale Sent NEAR Crashing 17% appeared first on CoinCentral.

